In 1968, I was a sixteen-year-old girl with three writing, my boyfriend, and sex. So… I started a diary, got married, and had a baby. Now, in 2025, I am a seventy-three-year-old woman with three writing, my family, and, well… It's time to tell my story...
As a teenager, Dawn had everything she wanted in suburban Toronto—good grades, proud parents, and a passionate romance with an ambitious young artist. But when her father's affair shattered her family and her mother warned "you can't trust men," her world turned upside down. In an act of rebellion, Dawn married her boyfriend and became a young mother. Together, with their young son, they ran away to Pushthrough, an abandoned Newfoundland outport with no roads, no electricity, no neighbours, and no escape.
"A gripping story of courage and new beginnings that whisks you to the rugged shores of 1970's Newfoundland – so vivid and intimate, you'll forget you weren't really there." —Tina Hagmann, author of When Atlantis Calls
This is the raw, unfiltered true story of one young mother's struggle to confront love, isolation, and self-reliance in one of Canada's most remote wilderness areas. Battling brutal weather and near-death adventures, she spiralled toward breakdown—until an unexpected moment of redemption changed everything.
Perfect for readers of Wild, Educated, and The Glass Castle—this inspiring coming-of-age memoir about choosing between love and identity is the unforgettable first book in the Journey From Sea to Sand to Snow.
RESCUED: A YOUNG MOTHER’S MEMOIR OF SURVIVAL ON NEWFOUNDLAND’S FORGOTTEN COAST by Dawn E. Neill.
This book will forever be a unique read for me. Harrowing and unforgettable this book speaks to the author’s resilience, fortitude and leave you on the edge of your seat. Reading the author’s words will leave you breathless in places and hanging on the edge of your seat with fear for her and her young son.
In the pages you find the details of her incredible four-year struggle. Fleeing to an abandoned outport in 1972, she survived in complete isolation without electricity or neighbors. I can not begin to imagine the nights there or the incredible isolation she would have felt, but through her words and her very polished descriptive writing it was possible to feel her emotions.
What started as an act of rebellion, led her to an almost breaking point and were it not for a moment of redemption I am not sure I would ever have been able to read this story.
A coming-of-age story for anyone who has ever had to choose between love and identity, offering both caution and hope on a journey to self-discovery.
The author utilized fifty-year-old diary entries and oral histories to write this book.
Dawn E. Neill’s Rescued is a breathtaking act of courage both in life and on the page. With the clarity of hindsight and the vulnerability of truth, she revisits her sixteen-year-old self: a girl who traded the noise of suburban Toronto for the silence of a forgotten Newfoundland coast. What unfolds is not just a story of survival in the wilderness, but of emotional endurance of a young woman learning what love, identity, and strength truly mean when every comfort is stripped away.
Neill’s prose is alive with sensory detail the sting of sea wind, the isolation of Pushthrough, the heartbeat of motherhood in impossible conditions. Yet beneath the physical struggle lies something even more profound: a search for self amid the wreckage of family expectations and youthful rebellion. Readers of Educated, The Glass Castle, and Wild will recognize the same fearless introspection here, but Rescued carries a unique tenderness the rare kind that can only come from living to tell the story.
It’s not just a memoir; it’s a testament to resilience, the beauty of hard-won wisdom, and the quiet triumph of choosing oneself.
This was an incredible story about a young mother living with her wanderlust husband in an abandoned village along Newfoundland's Forgotten Coast. No running water or electricity! No neighbours! Weather extremes! I found the book a bit long in places (it could have been trimmed by 100 pages and been just as impactful), but she painted a vivid picture of the isolation and mental strain of life in the wild. I really wish there had been more pictures in the book as I think that would have made the book come to life. This would make a tremendous movie with some incredible experiences and larger-than-life characters. Content warnings. Occasional strong language. Peril. References to infidelity.
Fascinating true story of Dawn's life with her husband and small son in an abandoned Newfoundland outport. There were happy times, but also physical, mental, and emotional difficulties. The stress of usually being the only woman among a group of men told on her.
Loved this book about strength and courage and a woman’s courage to risk all for the love of her family till she can’t anymore. Highly recommend reading it.